From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Murray Cutter (15 March 1902, Nice, France – 19 April 1983, Burbank, California) was a versatile Hollywood orchestrator, working mainly for film composer Max Steiner, with over 150 credits spanning the mid-thirties to early 1960s. Nevertheless, he remains relatively unknown except for the much-loved original arrangement of Judy Garland's Over the Rainbow, which continues to be sampled by modern filmmakers. Similar to fellow arranger Alexander Courage, Cutter's name has tended to be overshadowed by the popularity of the composers with whom he was most associated. Cutter was unusual among orchestrators who tended to specialize, in that he was adept in all genres: musicals (New Moon, Kismet, The Desert Song); romantic drama (Waterloo Bridge, A Summer Place); adventure (Northwest Passage, The Caine Mutiny); family/comedy (National Velvet, Sugarfoot); suspense (The Picture of Dorian Gray, Key Largo); epics ("Helen of Troy"); and westerns (The Treasure of Sierra Madre, Johnny Belinda and The Searchers). An early assignment were the vocal arrangements for the 1937 film version of Rosalie, which ten years before had been orchestrated for Broadway by Steiner. At MGM Cutter worked for Arthur Freed and Mervyn LeRoy on The Wizard of Oz. Under the loose musical direction of Herbert Stothart he contributed the "metallic sound" for the Tin Woodman's If I Only Had a Heart. Cutter told Oz historian Aljean Harmetz for "Over the Rainbow" he made it sound as pretty as he could with lots of strings and a touch of woodwind. After the war he collaborated most closely with Steiner during his golden period with Warner Brothers. Their work on A Summer Place netted them a US #1 hit for the insistent theme song. Joining ASCAP in 1946, Cutter occasionally wrote original music for the screen but rarely received a credit. His last credit, along with Steiner, was for Disney's forgettable Those Calloways in 1965. No known Broadway credits are recorded for him.
Birthday: March 15, 1902
Death: April 19, 1983
May 19, 1950
November 11, 1950
April 23, 1952
April 21, 1962
May 02, 1947
May 04, 1961
January 13, 1965
January 31, 1941
October 01, 1959
August 24, 1951
January 26, 1955
April 07, 1951
September 10, 1937
February 11, 1951
April 26, 1938
June 24, 1954
October 15, 1937
January 15, 1948
July 16, 1948
September 02, 1949
July 07, 1950
April 29, 1938
June 16, 1959
December 23, 1957
December 27, 1961
February 19, 1959
December 24, 1948
December 25, 1951
April 07, 1948
January 10, 1952
July 30, 1947
December 13, 1940
January 28, 1946
November 19, 1952
July 01, 1947
November 21, 1945
May 11, 1944
April 12, 1951
September 14, 1946
October 22, 1937
January 21, 1938
April 25, 1941
August 20, 1937
November 08, 1961
May 20, 1948
October 10, 1939